I have to say I like that math. I hauled 66,000 fresh water shrimp for a friend from Fort Worth to Douglas, Alabama (a bit NW of Gadsden) in 4 livehaul totes on a flat bed trailer. Cat scale put the total weight at 16,880 without me and my personal gear. The trailer weighed about 2,000lbs, the shrimp weighed about 10lbs, so the totes, two oxygen tanks and water weighed 9,000lbs. I kept my speed at about 69-70 the whole trip to keep the RPMs less than 2000, and on hills I tried to keep them between 1500 and 2000. Sometimes that was tough on steep hills with overdrive off. Except for being conscious of the fact that I was hauling a lot of weight I hardly noticed the trailer was there. The one thing that was noticable was when I would hit rough patches in the road and the water would slosh. I could feel a pulsating as the water went back and forth. Fortunately, the trailer was a brand new 16' Load Trail that handled like a dream. I just bought a Prodigy brake controller (based on the comments I read here) and loved it. First experience with electric brakes. My friend wanted to either use his old, beat up trailer or rent one (with a hydraulic unit on the tongue), but I talked him into buying one instead, since he could use it for years to come and it helps his business to be able to deliver shrimp instead of air-shipping them. I think the totes must have had a lot of wind resistance, because MPG went up by less than . 5MPG on the return trip. With the empty totes the total towing weight was probably about 3,000lbs. Of course, I sped up to between 75 and 80 on the return trip. :-laf And to think that my old gasser F-150 was getting 11MPG totally empty on the highway.